Americans share ownership of approximately 600 million acres of land and water in the United States. These public lands include federal designations like national parks, forests, wildlife refuges, and monuments, as well as state and local areas owned by the public.
Take action to safeguard our national monuments. Visit www.nwf.org/monuments to learn more.
Our Work
These often spectacular places are managed by many different federal agencies for a wide variety of purposes, but the Department of the Interior and the Department of Agriculture bear most of the management responsibility. The National Wildlife Federation is committed to safeguarding these special places and other landscapes that provide habitat for wildlife and opportunities for people to recreate and reconnect with nature. Our staff works to preserve these areas for the wildlife and people who depend on them through several different campaigns and initiatives.
Reforming Oil and Gas Development on Public Lands—The National Wildlife Federation works to redefine how energy development should occur on public lands in order to meet our energy needs while sustaining the fish, wildlife, water resources, and America's outdoor traditions. National Wildlife Federation helps lead the Sportsmen for Responsible Energy Development coalition to accomplish these reforms.
Supporting Conservation Program Budgets and Other Conservation Tools—The National Wildlife Federation works at many levels to secure the funding for conservation tools like the Land and Water Conservation Fund, the nation's premier program to acquire new places to recreate outdoors and protect crucial ecosystems. In tandem with advocacy to Congress, the National Wildlife Federation pushes the Department of the Interior and other federal administrative agencies to implement conservation friendly policies, for example through influencing the America's Great Outdoors initiative.
Protecting Public Lands—In addition to helping gain support for new public lands protections, the National Wildlife Federation defends special places from fragmentation and development of all kinds. For example, the National Wildlife Federation works to prevent oil and gas drilling in the iconic Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. We also work to make sure important renewable energy development, such as wind and solar, is cited properly and developed in a way that sustains wildlife.
Reforming the 1872 Mining Law—Recognizing that an outdated federal law is to blame for over a century of impacts from hard rock mining, the National Wildlife Federation and partners in the sportsmen community have set their sights on reforming the 1872 mining law in order to strengthen protections for fish, wildlife, and water resources.
America's Public Lands
Too Special to Sell Off
Our public lands are part of the American identity—they sustain fish and wildlife and provide outdoor recreation and clean air and water. But national parks, forests, wildlife refuges, and other public lands are under attack. Learn how you can help keep our public lands in public hands.
A new storymap connects the dots between extreme weather and climate change and illustrates the harm these disasters inflict on communities and wildlife.
More than one-third of U.S. fish and wildlife species are at risk of extinction in the coming decades. We're on the ground in seven regions across the country, collaborating with 52 state and territory affiliates to reverse the crisis and ensure wildlife thrive.